Aldous Leonard Huxley was born on July 26, 1894 in Godalming, Surrey, in the
SE of England. He was the third son of Dr. Leonard Huxley and Julia Arnold.
Huxley belonged to a family whose members were recognised to be intellectual
people. He was the grandson of Thomas Henry Huxley, who was a very important
biologist who developed an interesting theory on the evolution. His aunt, Mrs.
Humphrey Ward, was a famous late-Victorian novelist, and the father of his aunt,
Matthew Arnold, was a poet. Aldous's mother was the granddaughter of Thomas
Arnold, a famous educator. One of his brothers was a great zoologist, also the
first direct of Unesco. So, observing the atmosphere in which Aldous Leonard
grew up, we can tell that he was very influenced by his relatives. If we focus
our attention on the book I want to analyse, we can see that there is a heritage
in the book from both sides; there is the extraordinary capacity of writing, he
has a determined style, and of course there is the knowledge of human evolution
and his idea of a utopic future. The class structure that was so important in
the England of Huxley’s childhood is also to be seen in the society which he
presents in Brave New World.

Huxley had some experiences which made him stand apart from the class to
which he belonged by birth. He was considered different as a child for his
intelligence; we can also see that Huxley reflected this sense, this feeling of
being an outsider in characters such as Bernard Marx and Hemholtz. These
characters used to gather together and speak about their emotions that life
produced on them. Huxley might have felt different from other people, like these
two Alpha Plus men.

The death of his mother from cancer when he was only 14 , in 1908, meant also
a change in his life; it gave him a sense of the transience of human happiness,
and of course, it led to the break-up of the family home. You can also see the
feeling that means the loss of one’s mother in Brave New World through the
Savage’s reactions. In August 1914, one of his brothers, Trevenen, committed
suicide; this also affected him of course, besides because Aldous was very close
to him. Over twenty years later, in 1936, Huxley published Eyeless in Gaza, were
the death of his mother and brother are reflected.

Huxley studied at the prestigious school Eton. At the age of 16, an eye
illness made him nearly blind, and forced him to leave school. Therefore he
couldn’t complete some scientific training that was so interesting for him; in
the beginning, he intended to study medcine, then he turned to literature. Even
though, his eyesight improved after a couple of years and he recovered enough to
go to Oxford University where he graduated in English literature. He was unfit
for military service and didn’t fight in World War I, which was an experience
that marked a lot of his other colleges. Instead he worked as a farm labourer at
Lady Ottoline Morrell's Garsington Manor. Huxley was very interested in science,
and he had really good ideas related to the subject; he used some of these in
Brave New World, although he never managed to work in a big scientific project.

While being at Oxford, he met writers like Lytton Strachey, D. H. Lawrence
and Bertrand Russell.

Huxley started his career as a journalist, he also practised music and
artistic criticism and made a few book reviews. Huxley published his first book
in 1916, it was a collection of poems, "The Burning Wheel". The three books
which followed this one, were also poem books, in which the influence of French
symbolism is to be seen. He married in 1919 a Belgian refugee, Maria Nys, and
they had a child, Matthew Huxley, the year after. By then Huxley was working for
the Athenaeum magazine, after that, he became the first British editor of the
magazine House and Garden; he also worked for Vogue. Huxley's family travelled a
lot, especially between London and Italy, but also to places such as India and
the United States. They lived first near Florence and then on the Côte d'Azur.
In Along th Road, 1925, Huxley describes all the places and works of art he had
taken in since his arrival in Italy.

Huxley he wrote many novels, which were more appreciated by the public than
his essays and poems. He became more famous, with his reputation established,
when his first novel "Crome Yellow" (1921) was published. Huxley wrote some
comic novels, such as "Antic Hay" (1923) and "Those Barren Leaves" (1925); here
he made clear that he had an extraordinary ability in introducing very
intellectual ideas in fiction novels. In Crome Yellow and in Antic Hay he shows
the expression of a mood of disenchantment in the early 1920s related to the
past Victorian mores. His generation had experienced "the violent disruption of
almost all the standards, conventions and values current in the previous epoch",
in Huxley's words. Some people criticised the explicit discussion of sex in his
novel Antic Hay, which was even burned in Cairo due to these criticisms. He
published a book of essays about philosophical and social aspects in 1927,
"Proper Studies".

When Huxley first visited the United States around 1926, he was amused by the
extravagance of American society, but he didn’t like how American people spent
their free time, spending it in useless things and not in trying to improve
their mental capacity "Nowhere, perhaps, is there so little conversation... It
is all movement and noise..." was what he said about this. It was his visit to
the United States which made him so pesimistic about the cultural future of
Europe. He said: "The thing which is happening in America is a revaluation of
values, a radical alteration (for the worse) of established standards."

He could see the fascist Italy that was led by Benito Mussolini; this might
have had some influence in Brave New World. Fascism and the incidents of the
Soviet Union helped him when creating his distopia or bad utopia. Huxley was in
each of his writings very critical with Western civilization.

Huxley wrote Brave New World, his most celebrated work, in only four months
in 1931. Three years before this his best sold novel "Point Counter Point"
(1928) had been published; here he tried to mix the novel and the essay. During
these three years, he had written some stories, poems and some essays, but no
big novel. Brief Candles, 1930,was a collection of short stories, Music at
Night, 1931, volumes of essays.

In April 1937, the Huxleys arrived to the United States; he was by then a
very famous novelist and the Peace Pledge Union's celebrity. By that time,
Huxley was more concerned with things such as anarchism or mystical salvation
than with the lamentable situation of the contemporary society. Huxley has the
intention of returning to Europe, but his wife needed to live in a hot and dry
climate. The year after they moved to Hollywood, Aldous worked as a
screenwriter. In After Many a Summer, 1939, Huxley expresses his reaction to
Hollywood and the cult to movie stars. Huxley and Hollywood were not compatible,
and Aldous was unable to write a popular play during the inter-war years. He
became disenchanted with the world of the film studios, and he reflects this in
Ape and Essence, 1948.

In 1946 Huxley wrote a foreword to Brave New World. There he explained that
he intended to find a sane society, and that he believed that it existed. Even
though, he was worried about the dangers that might cause society fall into
insanity.

Huxley was worried about the spirituality of the world citizens by that time;
this led him towards mysticism and drugs. In the 1950’s Huxley became famous for
his interest in a determined type of drugs, like LSD; he looked for drugs that
would release your mind, would make you forget your problems, escape from your
present but that had no negative effect. Apparently, he consumed drugs like
mescaline and LSD a dozen times over ten years.

His ideas and obsessions with drugs are to be seen in a few books: Doors of
Perception (1954), Heaven and Hell (1956), Island (1962)...

Huxley produced 47 books in his life. Some critics say that he was a better
essayist than a novelist, because he cared more for his ideas than for the
development of his characters in his books. Even though Huxley really in better
at writing essays, his most read books are novels. In 1959 the American Academy
of Arts and Letters gave him the Award of Merit for the novel.

During the 1960’s he became a cult figure. The famous music group "The Doors"
named themselves after one of Huxley’s novels, "the Doors of Perception".

Once, there was a fire in his house and all his papers and books burned;
after this incident, he called himself "a man without a past".

Huxley’s interests were very varied. He liked Greek history, Buddhist texts,
philosophy, science, psychology... And he knew a lot of things about these
subject so we can say he had a privileged mind.

Aldous Huxley was a pacifist. He remained blind nearly all his life. Maria,
his first wife, died in 1955 and Huxley married Laura Archera a year later. He
died in November 22 of 1963, the same day that President John F. Kennedy was
assassinated.